Jetty is a Java HTTP (Web) server and Java Servlet container. While Web Servers are usually associated with serving documents to people, Jetty is now often used for machine to machine communications, usually within larger software frameworks. Jetty is developed as a free and open source project as part of the Eclipse Foundation. The web server is used in products such as Apache ActiveMQ,[2] Alfresco,[3] Apache Geronimo,[4] Apache Maven, Apache Spark, Google App Engine,[5] Eclipse,[6] FUSE,[7] iDempiere,[8] Twitter's Streaming API[9] and Zimbra.[10] Jetty is also the server in open source projects such as Lift, Eucalyptus, Red5, Hadoop and I2P.[11] Jetty supports the latest Java Servlet API (with JSP support) as well as protocols HTTP/2 and WebSocket.
Overview
Developed as an independent open source project, in 2009 Jetty moved to Eclipse.[12][13] Jetty provides Web services in an embedded Java application and it is already a component of the Eclipse IDE. It supports AJP, JASPI, JMX, JNDI, OSGi, WebSocket and other Java technologies.[5]
History
Originally developed in the Sydney suburb of Balmain by software engineer Greg Wilkins, Jetty was originally an HTTP server component of Mort Bay Server (Mort Bay is an area of Balmain).[14]
Jetty was originally called IssueTracker (its original application) and then MBServler (Mort Bay Servlet server). Neither of these were much liked, so Jetty was finally picked.[14]
Jetty was started in 1995 and was hosted by MortBay, creating version 1.x and 2.x, until 2000. From 2000 to 2005, Jetty was hosted by sourceforge.net where version 3.x, 4.x, and 5.x were produced. In 2005, the entire Jetty project moved to codehaus.org.[15] As of 2009, the core components of Jetty have been moved to Eclipse.org, and Codehaus.org continued to provide integrations, extensions, and packaging of Jetty versions 7.x and 8.x (not 9.x)[16][17] In 2016, the main repository of Jetty moved to the github,[18] but still under the IP Process of the Eclipse Foundation.
Version |
Home |
Java Version |
Protocols |
Servlet Version |
JSP Version |
Status |
9.3.x |
Eclipse[17] |
1.8 |
HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, WebSocket JSR356, SPDY |
3.1 |
2.3 |
Stable since 2015-02-25[19][20] |
9.2.x |
Eclipse[17] |
1.7 |
HTTP/1.1, WebSocket JSR356, SPDY |
3.1 |
2.3 |
Stable since 2014-04-16[21] |
9.1.x |
Eclipse[17] |
1.7 |
HTTP/1.1, WebSocket JSR356, SPDY |
3.1 |
2.3 |
Stable since 2013-11-18[22] |
9.0.x |
Eclipse[17] |
1.7 |
HTTP/1.1, WebSocket, SPDY |
3.0 (tracking 3.1 drafts) |
2.2 |
Stable since 2013-03-08[23] |
8.x |
Eclipse,[17] Codehaus[16] |
1.6 |
HTTP/1.1, WebSocket, SPDY |
3.0 |
2.1 |
End of Life[24] |
7.x |
Eclipse,[17] Codehaus[16] |
1.5, J2ME |
HTTP/1.1, WebSocket, SPDY |
2.5 |
2.1 |
End of Life[24] |
6.x |
Codehaus[16] |
1.4–1.5 |
HTTP/1.1 |
2.5 |
2.0 |
Vintage (Still only used by Gilles) |
5.x |
SourceForge |
1.2–1.5 |
HTTP/1.1 |
2.4 |
2.0 |
Antediluvian |
4.x |
SourceForge |
1.2, J2ME |
HTTP/1.1 |
2.3 |
1.2 |
Ancient |
3.x |
SourceForge |
1.2 |
HTTP/1.1 RFC2068 |
2.2 |
1.1 |
Fossilized |
2.x |
Mortbay |
1.1 |
HTTP/1.0 RFC1945 |
2.1 |
1.0 |
Legendary |
1.x |
Mortbay |
1.0 |
HTTP/1.0 RFC1945 |
|
|
Mythical |
See also
References
External links